Close
Help




JOURNAL

Journal of Experimental Neuroscience

Design and Application of a Novel Virtual Reality Navigational Technology (VRNChair)

Submit a Paper


Journal of Experimental Neuroscience 2014:8 7-14

Technical Advance

Published on 02 Mar 2014

DOI: 10.4137/JEN.S13448


Further metadata provided in PDF



Sign up for email alerts to receive notifications of new articles published in Journal of Experimental Neuroscience

Abstract

This paper presents a novel virtual reality navigation (VRN) input device, called the VRNChair, offering an intuitive and natural way to interact with virtual reality (VR) environments. Traditionally, VR navigation tests are performed using stationary input devices such as keyboards or joysticks. However, in case of immersive VR environment experiments, such as our recent VRN assessment, the user may feel kinetosis (motion sickness) as a result of the disagreement between vestibular response and the optical flow. In addition, experience in using a joystick or any of the existing computer input devices may cause a bias in the accuracy of participant performance in VR environment experiments. Therefore, we have designed a VR navigational environment that is operated using a wheelchair (VRNChair). The VRNChair translates the movement of a manual wheelchair to feed any VR environment. We evaluated the VRNChair by testing on 34 young individuals in two groups performing the same navigational task with either the VRNChair or a joystick; also one older individual (55 years) performed the same experiment with both a joystick and the VRNChair. The results indicate that the VRNChair does not change the accuracy of the performance; thus removing the plausible bias of having experience using a joystick. More importantly, it significantly reduces the effect of kinetosis. While we developed VRNChair for our spatial cognition study, its application can be in many other studies involving neuroscience, neurorehabilitation, physiotherapy, and/or simply the gaming industry.



Downloads

PDF  (3.48 MB PDF FORMAT)

RIS citation   (ENDNOTE, REFERENCE MANAGER, PROCITE, REFWORKS)

BibTex citation   (BIBDESK, LATEX)

XML

PMC HTML


Sharing


What Your Colleagues Say About Journal of Experimental Neuroscience
I am happy to provide an endorsement for Journal of Experimental Neuroscience because the editor provided a great deal of flexibility in providing an opportunity to publish.  I must also commend the helpful staff at Libertas who have facilitated the publishing process.
Dr Richard Guy (School of Medical Sciences, RMIT University, Bundoora, Australia)
More Testimonials

Quick Links


New article and journal news notification services
Email Alerts RSS Feeds
Facebook Google+ Twitter
Pinterest Tumblr YouTube